In the second half of the 20th century, anarchist artists from PROVO,
feminist movement Dolle Mina, Amsterdam squatters and media activists
influenced Dutch state politics and changed public opinion with their
sensational actions. What were they fighting for and what has become of
activist art today? The exhibition tells the story of creative protest
movements in the Netherlands from 1960s till 1990s, when those movements
flourished, and also includes pieces by contemporary artists working
with political themes today.

ArtLeaks is collective platform initiated by an international group of artists, curators, art historians and intellectuals in response to the abuse of their professional integrity and the open infraction of their labor rights. In the art world, such abuses usually disappear, but some events bring them into sharp focus and therefore deserve public scrutiny. Only by drawing attention to concrete abuses can we underscore the precarious condition of cultural workers and the necessity for sustained protest against the appropriation of politically engaged art, culture and theory by institutions embedded in a tight mesh of capital and power.

Oleg Kireev (born 1975) - art- and mediacritic, editor and curator,
writer, critic and activist, founder of the Ghetto collective, Moscow.
Participated in a number of media-political campaigns ("Against all
parties", 1999) and actions ("Barricade at Bolshaya Nikitskaya", May
1998). Author of articles on art and politics in the Russian and
international press ("Novaya gazeta", "Nezavasimaya gazeta", "Flash
art", "Siksi", "Mute"

The Letter written by N. Tolokonniokova in which she outlines the
problematics of Gender Equality and other fundamental freedoms in frames
of ethical consensus monopolized by the Russian Orthodox Church and the
Russian State, absent the plurality of the people of Russia and
incarceration of Pussy Riot, as its main actors.